Nature Lover's Almanac, A: Kinky Bugs, Stealthy Critters, Prosperous Plants & Celestial Wonders
By Diane Olson
5/5
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About this ebook
Did you know that: We all have follicle mites living on our faces? In India, the humble pigeon is a symbol of lust? Jumping spiders sometimes watch TV with you? Healthy garden soil has the same characteristics as a good chocolate cake? The North Pole rarely points north? The caterpillar of the silver-spotted skipper blasts its frass (poop) five feet outside its nest? Fascinating but little-known facts of nature will connect you with the rhythms of the universe and enlighten you every day of the year. Also included are good tips for gardeners as well as a rundown of what constellations you can see in the night sky each month.
Diane Olson
Diane Olson’s “Urban Almanac” column, upon which this book is based, has been running in Salt Lake City’s Catalyst magazine for sixteen years. She has also written for New York Spirit, Salt Lake Magazine, and Utah Homes and Gardens. She lives in Salt Lake City.
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Reviews for Nature Lover's Almanac, A
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5An excellent little book chock-full of delicious trivia. (Did you know that the milky sap lettuce- and lettuce-related plants release when you cut their stems actually has opiate-like affects on humans? In other words, drink it and it will make you high.) I particularly recommend this for gardeners, since a lot of the trivia about about gardening, but I'm not a gardener and I got a real kick out of it.
Book preview
Nature Lover's Almanac, A - Diane Olson
December
Prologue
It’s easy to become disconnected from the natural world, especially for those of us who live and work in cities. We work inside hermetically sealed buildings; we commute; we go home and work some more. And we despair that we don’t have the time, the money, or whatever it is we think we need more of before we can get out and engage with nature.
But we don’t have to go into the wilderness to find nature. It’s everywhere.
Bring home a potted plant and a whole new ecosystem springs into action around it. Dig a hole, fill it with water and voila, primordial soup. For that matter, our bodies are bustling with tiny creatures that feed off our secretions, skin and hair.
If you want to connect with the natural world, all you have to do is pay attention. Nothing is too small to be unimportant—or uninteresting.
January
January 1
January takes its name from Janus, the two-faced God who guards the passage between past and future. In days gone by, many Native American tribes kept track of the seasons by the recurring full moon. This was the month of the Full Wolf Moon or Full Old Moon.
January 2
Hints of an Approaching Snow Storm
High, thick cirrostratus clouds
A halo around the sun or moon
A sudden drop in the cloud ceiling
Smoke from chimneys barely rises, due to low pressure
January 3
Tonight and tomorrow night, look to the north for the Quadrantid meteor shower, visible in the Northern Hemisphere, radiating from near the constellation Boötes. The Quadrantid shower is one of the year’s best, typically producing over 100 meteors per hour.
January 4
Earth reaches perihelion, its annual position closest to the sun today. During winter, the lower altitude of the sun means its light hits our hemisphere at an oblique angle, causing the atmosphere to dissipate the heat.
January 5
Feed the birds! Seeds make great fodder, but birds also need fatty foods, like suet cakes and peanut butter, during cold weather.
January 6
Magpies
Black-billed magpies are frequent and rowdy visitors to winter suet feeders. Omnivorous and resourceful, magpies forage for insects, berries, seeds and carrion; they pick ticks off horses, cows and deer and routinely pilfer from predators and other birds. They often make food caches, into which they deposit fresh and regurgitated snacks. Magpies can find food by scent, which is unusual in the avian world, as most birds have limited sense of smell.
January 7
There’s always plenty in the natural world to engage the senses, even in the midst of winter.
During the day, look for trees and shrubs with interesting forms, like weeping crabapple and cherry, sumac and corkscrew willow, or those with cool seedpods, like catalpa, red bud, honeylocust, sycamore and linden.
At night, look for planets (stars scintillate, while planets shine more steadily and appear disc-shaped) and constellations. Take a deep breath. What kind of firewood is burned in your area? Cedar? Maple? Oak? Pinion? Juniper? They all have distinctive aromas.
Day or night, pay attention to the feel of the earth beneath your feet and the air against your skin.
January 8
Skunk!
You just might encounter a skunk in your rambles. Skunks stay active all winter, foraging for rodent nestlings, snails, fallen fruit and old vegetables, carrion and garbage. Don’t worry—skunks typically give plenty of warning and generally are not trigger-happy. Before spraying, they do an elaborate warning dance, which, in the spotted skunk, includes a handstand. But if that doesn’t do the trick, nipples leading from the anal glands pop out, adjust, and rotate like an anti-aircraft gun. If they’re near enough, the attacker gets a jet right in the eyes; otherwise, an all-encompassing mist is exuded.
January 9
Though it seems they do, fruit flies do not spontaneously generate from ripening fruit; they can just smell it from a long way away. The fruit fly has 32 odor receptors on each antenna, and all are honed to sniff out its favorite food—yeast.
Female fruit flies both feed on fermenting fruit and lay their eggs in it—400 to 500 of them, in fact. They hatch in half a day, and the larvae feed for about four days before they pupate. Four days later, another generation of randy, red-eyed adults emerges ready to perpetuate the cycle.
Fruit fly courtship and mating are ceremonial and lengthy. The male must perform a five-step song-and-dance number to the female’s liking (the re-dos can take hours) before he’s allowed to transfer his sperm cells. That takes at least 30 minutes. The female then stores the sperm until she finds a suitable time and place to process it and lay her eggs.
Should you run out of slightly slimy fruit, worry not; fruit flies can sustain themselves on sink drain slime, moist crumbs, and even alcohol fumes. Seriously, though, to rid your kitchen of fruit flies, tape a sheet of paper into a funnel and put it into a jar baited with a few ounces of cider vinegar. They won’t be able to resist.
January 10
Coywolves, coyote/wolf hybrids, are flourishing in southeastern Canada and the northeastern U.S. One is even reputed to be living in New York City’s Central Park. Larger than coyotes but smaller than wolves, they are strong enough to hunt deer and are able to coexist with humans. And unlike many interbred species, their offspring are fertile.
January 11
If you have a pond with over-wintering fish, make sure a section is always ice-free.
January 12
Unlike most insects, earwigs are good mothers. They keep their eggs warm and clean and vigorously protect them from predators. As the eggs hatch, the mother assists them, and the nymphs nest under her like baby birds. Mama earwigs even regurgitate food for their babies until they’re able to hunt and forage on their own.
January 13
Noctilucent clouds are rare, lovely, blue-white tendrils, most often seen in the western sky half an hour to an hour after sunset. They form in the mesosphere, about 50 miles up, where it’s very cold and dry, and are composed of tiny ice crystals.
January 14
Back in our more hirsute days, goose bumps served a function: contracting the tiny muscles at the base of each hair created a fluffy layer of insulation, helping to retain body heat.
January 15
We all have follicle mites living on our faces, primarily in our eyelashes and eyebrows. They wander from hair to hair, feeding on skin cells, hormones, and oils, occasionally ducking inside a follicle opening for a quickie. After mating, the female lays her eggs inside a follicle or sebaceous gland. The larvae hatch in three to four days and take only a week to develop into adults. Fortunately, the